Newspaper Page Text
Extension News
Health—According to Georgia’s
vital statistics, we are only half
way to health. We need twice as
many health officials as. we have.
There are not enough doctors,
nurses, health officers and hos
pitals in the rural areas. Although
the population of the state is 65.6
per cent rural, most of the doctors,
dentists and hospital facilities are
concentrated in city areas.
A report of the health panel of
the State Agricultural and Indus
trial Development Board says that
what medical facilities we have are
badly distributed in relation to the
population. One public health nurse
for every 5,000 people is called an
adequate minimum. Georgia has
only one public health nurse for
every 10,000. One health officer for
every 30,000 people, and Georgia
has one for every 65,000 people. One
sanitarian for every 20,000 people
Lemon Juice Recipe Checks
Rheumatic Pain Quickly
If you suffer from rheumatic, arthri*
tis or neuritis pain, try this simple
inexpensive home recipe that thousands
are using. Get a package of Ru'Ex
Compound, a 2 weeks’ supply today. Mix
it with a quart of water, add the
juice of 4 lemons. It’s easy, pleasant
and no trouble at all. You need only 3
tablespoonfuls two times a day. Often
within 48 hours sometimes over*
night splendid results are obtained.
If the pains do not quickly leave
and if you do not feel better, Ru'Ex
will cost you nothing to try as it is
sold by your druggist under an abso*
lute money'back guarantee. Ru*Ex
Compound is for sale and recommended by
J. R. JACKSON & SON
To Our
Farmer Friends
OUR DE-LINTING AND TREAT
ING PLANT IS IN OPERATION
Have your Cotton Seed De-Linted
and treated. It is the best insurance one
could have against bad stands, late cot
ton and boll weevil damage.
SUMMERVILLE GIN CO.
Summerville, Ga.
REALESTATE
WANTED
We have clients who will pay CASH for
your real estate in any part of the city.
FARRAR REAL ESTATE AGENCY
109 N. Commerce St.
Phone 41
I
te ?
bSoWP ?
t
x
JUST TWO MOMENTS! A
*t*
HOW MUCH of your money is invested in property X
that may be destroyed and what will you have left if g
that happens? Spend a moment figuring this out and j
another in calling us to check up. We will make sure
that you have insurance to reimburse you if your
property is destroyed. X
Summerville Insurance Agency!
B. W. and J. L. FARRAR, AGENTS ?
Office: 109 N. Commerce St. |
, X
PHONE 41-20—SUMMERVILLE i
is considered the minimum ratio.
Georgia has one for every 60,000
people.
The health panel also reports
that diseas6s which can be con
trolled by immunization —such as
typhoid and dyptheria—“are rapid
ly approaching the irreducible min
imum,” but the diseases not con
trollable by immunization have not
decreased.
The only answer seems to be
more doctors and dentists, more
hospitals, more public health serv
ices for Georgia’s rural population.
Statistics show that the death rate
for most diseases is higher in rural
areas than in urban areas. Rural
people are ill more often and for
longer periods of time. The Selec
tive Service rejection was higher
among farm youth than any other
occupational group. Obviously, our
rural health program needs con
siderable expansion.
Poultry Tips for March—Prepare
to raise out pullets this spring with
feed that is available, as good pul
lets will pay more next fall than
old hens will this spring.
Feed must be saved. Cull hens
early this spring and cull close
while meat prices are up.
Buy three chicks for every pul
let that is needed this fall. March
is the best month for starting
chicks to be grown out for layers*
Good chicks, well fed and started
now and well managed, should
start laying eggs in September.
If the brooder house is over-
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1946.
crowded, nature will thin them out.
Allow from three-fourths to one
square foot of floor space per
chick.
Start chicks with baby chick
feeders, but prepare to change these
feeders to broiler size feeders when
chicks are 3 weeks old.
Change size of waterer at the
same time and keep down wet
spots around waterers. Damp lit
ter will cause an epidemic of coc
cidiosis.
Prepare to get pullets out of the
brooder house as early as possible
(at latest 8 weeks) and grow a
cheaper and healthier pullet on
green feed, growing mash and
scratch. Feed pullets plenty of oats.
New 4-H Poultry Project The
Sears, Roebuck Company is giving
Chattooga County 4-H Club mem
bers 1,000 baby chicks to start a
poultry chain among the club mem
bers. These' baby chicks will be di
vided between 10 boys and girls
who have already been chosen.
These club members will care for
these 100 chicks and grow them out
and in the fall will show 12 of their
best pullets in a County Poultry
Show.
The prizes for the show will be
as follows:
Blue Award Group—Two places
in the county; S2O in cash to each
of the two 4-H Club members in
this group.
Red Award Group—Three places
in the county; $lO in cash to each
of the three 4-H Club members in
this group.
White Award Group—Five places
in the county; $7.50 in cash to each
of the five club members in this
group.
PLASTICS INDUSTRY OFFERS
EXPANDING MARKET FOR
SOUTHERN FARM PRODUCTS
ATLANTA, March 19.—Aft ex
panding market for southern farm
products such as cotton, wood prod
ucts, rosin and tung oil is offered
by the rapid development of the
plastics industry which depends on
southern farm products for many
of its raw materials, James W. Bar
nett, plastics designer and engi
neer, said here today.
Cotton, markets for which have
long been a serious southern prob
lem, is an absolute indispensable in
the manufacture of many of the
basic plastics. Resins from south
ern pines with tung oil from south
ern groves make up some of the
basic ingredients of plastics coat
ings.
Wood pulp in various forms is
essential in the making of various
plastic items, and the hull of such
nuts as walnuts are also used as
fillers for some plastic molded
items.
“I don’t predict that plastics can,
for example, consume the entire
cotton production in the forseeable
future, and the quantities of these
southern farm products consumed
by the plastics manufacturers is
limited now,” Barnett, who is head
of the largest plastics engineering,
designing and distribution firm in
the south cautioned, ‘‘but it is
abundantly clear that the develop
ment of the plastics industry will
mean additional markets for south
ern farm products.”
Legal Notices
State of Georgia, Office of Secre
tary of State:
Ben W. Fortson, Jr., secretary of
state of the state of Georgia, do
hereby certify that the two pages
of typewritten and written matter
hereto attached is one of the copies
of the petition filed in this office
in triplicate seeking to amend the
charter of the FARMERS AND
MERCHANTS BANK of Summer
ville, Chattooga County, Georgia:
this copy is certified and returned
to the petitioners for publication
as required by law.
In testimony whereof, I have
hereunto set my hand and affixed
the seal of my office, at the capitol.
in the city of Atlanta, this 14th day
of March in the year of our Lord
One Thousand Nine Hundred and
Forty-Six and of the independence
of the United States of America the
One Hundred and Seventieth.
BEN W. FORTSON, JR.,
.Secretary of State.
Georgia, Chattooga County:
To the Honorable Ben Fortson,
secretary of state, Atlanta, Georgia:
The Farmers & Merchants Bank,
with its principal office in the city
of Summetville, county of Chattoo
ga, state of Georgia, a corporation
doing general banking business,
hereby makes application through
its president, D. L. McWhorter, to
I Dr. B. Lovingood •
DENTIST
Lovingood Building
I Summerville, Ga.
j Phones: Office 12; Home, 40 j
USE
666
Cold Preparations
Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops
Caution use only as directed
amend its charter so that instead
of said charter reading, “With a
capital stock of Twenty-Five Thou
sand Dollars (25,000.00) divided into
250 shares of One Hundred Dollars
($100.00) par value, per share,”
said charter is desired to be amend
ed to read as follows, to-wit:
“With a capital stock of Fifty
Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) di
vided into 500 shares of One Hun
dred Dollars ($100.00) par value per
share.”
Applicant shows that the name
of said bank is Farmers & Mer
chants Bank; that the date of its
original charter is the sth day of
February, 1926; that its original
charter has never been amended.
There is filed herewith a certi
fied abstract from the minutes of
the stockholders of said bank, show
ing that the application for the
proposed amendment has been au
thorized by a vote of a majority in
amount of the entire capital stock
at a meeting of the stockholders
called for the purpose of acting
thereon by a resolution of the board
of directors.
There is also filed herewith a
certified abstract from the minutes
of the board of directors of said
bank, showing that said meeting of
the stockholders was called for the
purpose of acting on the above
mentioned amendment.
There is also filed herewith a
copy of said notice, with the cer
tification of the president of said
bank that he mailed same to each
stockholder, or in case of death, to
his or her representative, at least
ten days previous to the date of
said meeting, all as provided by
law.
FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK.
By D. L. McWhorter, President.
(Seal)
GEORGlA—Chattooga County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
E. L. Bishop having applied for
guardianship of the person—and
property of Charles M. Grogan, In
competent, of said County, notice
is given that said application will
be heard at my office at 10 o’clock
A. M., on the first Monday in April
next.
This March 4th, 1946.
J. W. KING, Ordinary
Georgia, Chattooga County:
To All Debtors and Creditors of the
Estate of Georgia Suggs.
All creditors of the estate of
Georgia Suggs, late of Chattooga
County, deceased, are hereby noti
fied to render their demands to
the undersigned, according to law,
So ffiaKW Pomps
GOMG TO TOMV/
Last year, the Central o£ Georgia moved
/Mkk*' w* over 15 million tons of freight—3o bil-
lion pounds! A heap of southern prod-
JR
ucts 8° to the markets of the world!
The C entr al of Georgia makes a vast
7* ... r contribution to the agricultural and in
dustrial development of the Southeast.
f: I >
» g As its improvement program gains mo-
mentum, the Central of Georgia looks
»» / forward to an even greater opportunity
~ Sjß. to serve industry and agriculture. Heav-
s ss&y* * er ra ’i- new an; i powerful steam and
i |diesel engines, strengthened bridges and
/■ « *4 ' z trestles, more freight cars, modern safe-
* Pa ty sw *tches —all the better to serve you
■y S' with swift, efficient and economical
transportation. Yes, with scores of im-
PMFffiTO / provements to give high hopes -to the
- i ■ 4 ' J ' o b reconversion, The Central of
Georgia looks to the future and signals,
k I '“’W “ All Clear Ahead ”
\ The Central of Georgia is also work-
t ing night and day to help bring new in-
if dustries to this territory. Already it
JtSIUhP' ' ¥ aS k een * nstrumenta l * n many new
ffFFSffWFFSl plants coming to the Southeast. This
|> 3 JinJW iF WW
M 9 ■■paaMU A V ' , \ means new jobs and more payrolls to
L eßvljaaW*™) ' /Q. boost prosperity in your community.
ttf M CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
A M WML
V Carrying the Products.
■‘d&p °! t^ie South to the
infr *** ~ Markets of the World
“ A Good Friend All Along the Line* 9
and all persons indebted to said
estate are required to make imme
diate payment.
This Feb. 4, 1946.
MRS. J. N. ALEXANDER,
Administratrix Estate of
Georgia Suggs.
GEORGIA, CHATTOOGA COUNTY.
CHATTOOGA COURT OF ORDI-
NARY AT CHAMBERS:
The appraisers upon application
of Alice McDaniel, widow of said
John McDaniel, for twelve months’
support for herself, having filed
their return, all persons concerned
hereby are cited to show cause, if
any they were, at the next regular
March term of this court, why
said application should not be
granted.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 4th day of February,
1946.
J. W. KING, Ordinary.
PETITION FOR DIVORCE
Mrs. Gladys M. Shatzer vs. Philip
S. Shatzer.
Suit for Divorce—Chattooga Su
perior Court.
To the defendant, Philip S. Shat
zer, you are hereby commanded to
be and appear at the next term of
the Superior Court of Chattooga
County, Georgia, to answer the
complaint of the plaintiff, men
tioned in the caption in her suit
against you for divorce.
Witness the Honorable Claude H.
Porter, Judge of said Court.
JNO. S. JONES,
JACKSON APPLIANCE CO.
Electrical Supplies
COMPLETE WIRING NEEDS
Lighting Fixtures
Fluorescent Display Window Striping
Located Next Door to Sitton’s Service
Station
Clerk Superior Court
GEORGIA —Chattooga County.
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that G. A.
Morgan, as administrator of estate
of Georgia Morgan, deceased, hav
ing applied to me by petition for
leave to sell the real estate of said
Georgia Morgan, deceased; and
that an order was made thereon at
the March Term, 1946, for citation,
and that citation issue; all the heirs
at law and creditors of the said
Georgia Morgan, deceased, will
take notice that I will pass upon
said application at the April Term,
1946, of the Court of Ordinary of
Chattooga County; and that un
less cause is shown to the contrary,
at said time, said leave will be
granted. This 4th day of March,
1946.
J. W. KING, Ordinary
SLIT FOR DIVORCE
Daugherty Lee Chandler vs. Nel
lie Stephenson Chandler.
Suit for Divorce—Chattooga Su
perior Court —May Term, 1946.
To the defendant, Nellie Stephen
son Chandler, you are hereby com
manded to be and appear at the
next term of the Superior Court of
Chattooga County, Georgia, to an
swer the complaint of the plaintiff
mentioned in the caption in his
suit against you for divorce.
Witness the Honorable Claude H.
Porter. Judge of said Court.
JNO. S. JONES, t
Clerk Superior Court